Weight perceptions and psychological well-being in young adults: mediating roles of dispositional gratitude, body appreciation, and weight self-stigma #MMPMID41339910
Alyami MM; Alshammari KA; Al-Mutawa M; Alzahrani HA
J Eat Disord 2025[Dec]; ? (?): ? PMID41339910show ga
OBJECTIVE: Obesity is a major global health challenge, particularly in Saudi Arabia (SA). Weight perceptions (WPs), how individuals perceive their body weight, are associated with psychological well-being. This study extends previous research by examining whether dispositional gratitude (DG), body appreciation (BA), and weight self-stigma (WSS) mediate the relationships between WPs and psychological well-being as measured by subjective well-being (SWB) and satisfaction with life (SWL). METHODS: 900 SA young adults (M(age)= 24.79 years, SD = 8.46, 62% female) participated in a cross-sectional online survey assessing WPs, SWB, SWL, DG, BA, WSS. Structural Equation Modelling (SEM) using maximum likelihood estimation with bootstrap was employed to evaluate parallel mediation models, adjusting for age, sex, marital status, and education. Model fit was assessed via chi(2), CFI, TLI, RMSEA, and SRMR. RESULTS: Participants had a mean BMI of 24.88 (SD = 5.90) and 38% had body weight misperceptions. For SWL, full mediation was supported (chi(2)(1) = 6.94, p = .008, CFI = 0.994, TLI = 0.839, RMSEA = 0.082, SRMR = 0.010). WPs were negatively associated with DG (beta = - 0.176, p < .001) and BA (beta = - 0.334, p < .001), but positively associated with WSS (beta = 0.408, p < .001). Indirect associations were significant through DG (beta = -0.064, p < .001), BA (beta = -0.059, p < .001), and WSS (beta = -0.042, p = .008) with total indirect association (beta = -0.166, p < .001), explaining 27.6% variance in SWL. Similar results for SWB showed full mediation, with significant total indirect association (beta = -0.153, p < .001), explaining 21.6% variance in SWB. CONCLUSION: These findings underscore the mediating roles of DG, BA, and WSS in the relationships between WPs and psychological well-being, suggesting that interventions targeting these factors could enhance psychological well-being among vulnerable young SA young adults living with obesity, especially those with weight misperceptions.